Victor Pankratius, Ali-Reza Adl-Tabatabai, Walter Tichy (Editors)

The call for chapters is closed.

Aims & Scope

With the emergence of multicore computers, we are facing the challenge of parallelizing performance-critical applications of all sorts. Compared to sequential applications, our repertoire of tools and methods for cost-effectively developing reliable, parallel applications is spotty. The purpose of this book is to capture the state-of-the-art of multicore software development and to make it accessible to researchers, practitioners, and students of multicore software engineering.

Publisher

The book will be published by Chapman & Hall/CRC Press Taylor and Francis Group.

With offices in London, Brighton, Basingstoke and Abingdon in the UK, New York and Philadelphia in the USA and Singapore and Melbourne in the Pacific Rim, the Taylor & Francis Group publishes more than 1000 journals and around 1,800 new books each year, with a books backlist in excess of 20,000 specialist titles. For two centuries Taylor & Francis has been fully committed to the publication of scholarly information of the highest quality, and today this remains the primary goal.

Topics

The book will address a general audience interested in current developments in the multicore area. From the software development point of view, chapters will focus on issues multicore systems architecture, operating systems, as well as languages and compilers for multicore systems.

Templates for Authors

A Chapter of about 20-30 pages is expected (please use templates below).

Templates: MS Word (doc, 32KB), Word Template Instructions (pdf, 103KB), Latex (zip, 6MB), Author's Guide (pdf, 306KB)

The Editors

The Editors
Ali-Reza Adl-Tabatabai
ali-reza.adl-tabatabai@intel.com
Victor Pankratius
pankratius@ipd.uka.de
Walter F. Tichy
tichy@ipd.uka.de

    Intel Programming Systems Lab
Santa Clara, California, USA    

    University of Karlsruhe    
Karlsruhe, Germany    

    University of Karlsruhe    
Karlsruhe, Germany    



GI This project is supported by the working group Software Engineering for Parallel Systems (SEPARS) of the German Computer Science Society (Gesellschaft fuer Informatik e.V.)